Sentences Generator
And
Your saved sentences

No sentences have been saved yet

107 Sentences With "big houses"

How to use big houses in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "big houses" and check conjugation/comparative form for "big houses". Mastering all the usages of "big houses" from sentence examples published by news publications.

It's progressive as shit, all kind of development, big houses.
Gossip about designers moving among big houses is rampant again.
But for the big houses, time periods matter for investing.
It is quintessential suburbia: Big houses, bigger parking lots, low crime.
"The fathers of the girls have big houses now," says Yan Vuy.
His mother used to drive him around to ogle the big houses.
She thought the place was too big, but Mr. Pilloni liked big houses.
"Russians like big houses, and they're not frightened of 'stuff,' " Mr. Samarine said.
The government built roads to Caracas, and rich people built big houses here.
"Possibly wealthy people won't buy as many big houses in London," he said.
I used to look up at these big houses and say, 'You rich bastards!
I seen how they was living and how everybody had big houses, driving nice cars.
Americans love building big houses, and we've been building them bigger and bigger for decades.
Advertise on Hyperallergic with Nectar Ads Big houses, particularly the old ones, tend to breed mystery.
Recently a shadow minister raised the prospect of those in big houses paying more council tax.
Dawson knows the ins and outs of the big houses and she understands how they think.
Champagne has come a long way since the mid-208s, when the big houses unquestionably ruled.
It has big houses, landscapes groomed to perfection and a median household income of about $172,000.
Their rising popularity has pushed big houses to concentrate far more on viticulture, for one thing.
I know people who live in big houses, own Eero systems, and can't imagine life without them.
"Consumers don't just want to see the shiny new cars, big houses or expensive products," he added.
They wrote about big houses in the country and people who can tell "claret from a Beaujolais".
The opulence of the grounds and "big houses" speak to the wealth of the sugar cane heyday.
Lots of them are working very hard, behind the creative directors at some of those big houses.
After she finished, she explained that she had rapped about rich people in big houses not being happy.
"I remember the big houses that my mom used to clean — like they were so big," she says.
Living in The central Bergen County borough is known for big houses, good schools and a rural atmosphere.
As a rule, designer honeymoons at big houses tend to be lavish affairs, and this was no exception.
But the rainmaking happens in the auctions that accompany the car show, when the big houses present their wares.
Not only that big paintings go in big houses, but art is a liquid investment —  just like real estate.
You could be driving through Beverly Hills or Bel Air with these big houses with gates and big hedges.
"Champagne, with a few exceptions, is about really big houses, signature styles, excellent branding," he said in an interview.
M.N. You'd go to people's houses, they had big houses and some kind of fancy Ferrari in the driveway.
Some people would have you believe that the small growers are all good, and the big houses are bad.
Champagnes from some big houses are great and from others mediocre, and the same is true with the grower-producers.
"If the beach washes out, the little houses go first," he said, "but then the big houses go after that."
In addition, Hall noted that big houses cost more to maintain, which can be a strain on a fixed retirement income. 
The big houses have been dismissed by many as stodgy and dull, more interested in marketing products than producing great wine.
"They all said we need big houses, we have a lot of relatives who are planning to come visit," he said.
The Big Houses of white landowners went to the state and their land to a reserve, so jobs in "Massa fields" vanished.
"I was just talking about some people having a lot of money, big houses, but actually, are they really happy?" she said.
"Airfare: $411.58Hotels: "The bride's family very generously rented the bridesmaids and the groomsmen big houses on Airbnb, so lodging was paid for.
With Champagne that means embracing both the jagged, distinctive expressions of the growers and the complex depth offered by the big houses.
"I was just talking about some people having a lot of money, having big houses, but actually are they really happy," she said.
The change is particularly bad for high-earners living in big houses in states like New York and California, which impose high taxes.
The members went and hid in the New Forest in nice big houses and just left the city to get on with it.
While some big houses have certainly been coasting for a long time, or have taken a cautious approach, Roederer is not among them.
All of the big houses take pride in these vintages years, and any of them will sufficiently whet your whistle and then some.
There were not many big houses — perhaps three in the hundred miles from Monterrey — but each fancy villa seemed to represent drug money.
Courtney, like Rachel Berry, like Modern Family's Lily (Aubrey Anderson-Emmons), all grew up with professional parents in big houses in mostly white neighborhoods.
"I was just talking about how some people have a lot of money, have big houses but actually are they really happy?" she said.
We work in big houses, my husband is a daily wage laborer and earns $3 a day, what can we do with that money?
A dark sense of humor also emerges in several of them that recalls folklore or even of children's stories: Great big houses suddenly collapsed.
He liked to look at the big houses as he pedaled, with their lush lawns that his father and other immigrant landscapers kept immaculate.
There are big houses and small grower-producers, oxidative and reductive styles, all of which is enough to stop any party before it begins.
"It meant she didn't have to go hat in hand to the big houses to get a new work in front of people," he said.
None of the big houses wanted to do it, and none of us saw it coming—but we made the decision, immediately, to do it.
After the 1967 war they move to Kuwait, where they have upper-middle-class lives as doctors and professors in big houses tended by servants.
But structuring public policy so that the market allows families with above-average incomes to live in nice big houses is a legitimate policy goal.
It's large weight, versatile heads, and robust battery means it's best suited for big houses, or those times when you want to do all the vacuuming.
Look no further than The Wall Street Journal's ongoing documentation of how big houses fare on the real-estate market for a hint at their decline.
"It's big houses, a lot of families and a lot of foreigners — from the States, most of them — that are getting married to Colombians," she said.
For many years, the big houses had little competition and few reasons to invest in careful viticulture, or winemaking, especially with their entry-level nonvintage bottles.
They sold their big houses outside Copenhagen and now they want to come into the city and live a fancy life in their late 50s and 60s.
Young people want big houses and cars, but "the revolution can't afford to provide that for everyone," she said, her long, gold fingernail extensions tapping the table.
I had expected some of what I encountered — I had seen enough movies, and came to this country expecting big cars and big houses and wide open spaces.
"When I go back and I talked to my old friends in banking, people ask if I miss the toys, if I miss the big houses," says Stein.
" Someone else put forth another idea, "I would also be ok with a spinoff of the original cast getting married, living in their big houses and having kids.
In a free housing market, for example, big houses generally do not go to those who need them most but to those willing and able to pay the most.
He grew up in a working-class neighborhood where the big houses were perfect for the large families of Irish, Polish and other Eastern European backgrounds that filled them.
I was in the city that all of these guys who are making all the money and having their ridiculous big houses at the time that this was happening.
These Champagnes tend to be more idiosyncratic than those from the big houses, which in their nonvintage wines have more resources to create smoothly consistent styles from year to year.
Till the late 80s, none of these big houses were out here, there were a few little places: Sarah's trailer and 12 or so converted army barracks that were rented out.
The Sentry, a watchdog backed by George Clooney, an actor, says that Mr Malong owns at least two big houses in Uganda and a $2m mansion in a gated community in Nairobi.
I live in Manchester now, and it feels like here and in Glasgow we can still do DIY club nights, live in big houses, or co-ops altogether—it's just the same.
The city has also been roiled by a wave of developer tear-downs of picturesque homes in well-established neighborhoods, making way for big houses and stirring sharp opposition in many places.
But Mr. Dolman, 393, doesn't have anything to prove, partly because he has already led one of the two big houses: He was chief executive of Christie's for 239 years, until 22011.
THE BLING Threads represents about 50 jewelry designers, ranging from independent brands to the big houses, with prices from 1,000 pounds to more than £1 million, or about $1,2003 to about $1.3 million.
"A light bulb just went off in my head that I've got these two big houses sitting vacant, surely I could help somebody that would need housing," he tells the local CBS station.
Just as those with large mortgages typically have big houses, those with huge student debts usually have a graduate degree in, say, business or medicine, and can expect a bumper salary as a result.
For discerning consumers, who over the last 2250 years have turned their attention from Champagne's big houses to focus on the grower-producers — small farmers who make their own wine — this might seem surprising.
In the future Nest will be releasing Nest Connect, a signal booster that will ensure people with big houses can use their new Nest gadgets everywhere, and a smart lock built by Nest and Yale.
Together with the zeal with which they have lately conceded this struggle ("It's not the economy, stupid" runs one poster), this gives away the category into which many top Brexiteers fall: romantics in big houses.
While it won't happen soon and perhaps the big houses won't feel it at all, expect smaller VCs to lose LPs as those LPs dump their cash into Maltese ICOs and not Sand Hill Road.
Filmmakers often use a suburban landscape to exemplify "normal" American life — big houses, manicured lawns and seemingly calm streets, a milieu the audience is supposed to connect with before descending into the horror of the story.
Okay, Ramsay for sure has the upper hand troops-wise, what with his thousands-strong Bolton army and the support of the Umbers and the Karstarks — two big houses that reneged on their loyalty to the Starks.
On Sunday, minutes of screen time would be devoted to Jon walking and then, with a quick fade out and in, Tyrion had a bushy beard and the heads of Westeros's big houses had suddenly appeared in the dragonpit.
In the cellars of the best of the big houses, the chef de cave (the head of the winemaking team) selects from dozens of still wines, taken from different grapes grown in vastly different vineyards from many different vintages.
Like the big houses that were learning to live a simpler, freer life and manage with fewer servants, their English gardens—just as their English rose bowls—were calling for a more honest, down-to-earth aesthetic, a real English rose.
For those who live in the port city's expansive seaside suburbs, there are further compensations: big houses with poolside bars, bevies of servants and, behind high walls and security guards, night spots as fancy as any in Dubai or Mumbai.
But the effect is to prioritize the wealthy second-home owners of Teton County, who own big houses on big pieces of land, and who would prefer not to look out their windows and see apartment complexes where the other half live.
If I put them in Ditmas Park, they can have lawns and big houses with staircases and driveways and garages, and I thought there could be people playing music in garages, which seems like the most romantic thing in the world to me.
Born in a Vancouver suburb he characterized as having "big houses and progressive politics" to a geologist father and an accountant mother, Mr. Rebagliati became a skiing prodigy before he was 10 and he was being groomed for the Canadian national ski team.
He began life with the burden of a family debt to pay and ended it a multimillionaire, with a yacht, three big houses, a penthouse on Sutton Place, a table at the Stork Club, and a taste for restaurants like Le Pavillon.
"They are banking on consumption moderating going forward, but there's a risk that consumers are used to the big houses, the big cars ... so consumers may be more resilient than anyone is expecting," said Jean-Paul Lam, an economics professor at the University of Waterloo.
Total export sales edged up 21.1 percent to nearly 155 million bottles, but total export revenue rose 1.8 percent to 2.9 billion euros as the focus on value of big houses, such as LVMH's Moët & Chandon and Pernod Ricard's Mumm, the world's best-selling champagne, paid off.
Total export sales edged up 21.1 percent to nearly 21 million bottles, but total export revenue rose 20.8829 percent to 2.9 billion euros as the focus on value of big houses, such as LVMH's Moët & Chandon and Pernod Ricard's Mumm , the world's best-selling champagne, paid off.
In 2016, David Cay Johnston's The Making of Donald Trump—published by Melville House after the big houses shrugged it off—and the Post's Trump Revealed (published by Scribner) were bestsellers, but sales of both paled in comparison to books that approached Trump's support more tangentially.
Without Oprah (and, to a lesser extent, Jon Stewart), and with publishers increasingly unlikely to make the expensive multi-book investments often needed to turn young authors into household names, the big houses are looking more and more to books that can easily generate media interest.
Venezuela has a long Caribbean coastline, and the closeness of that warm sea permeates the capital, with its eternal summer weather, where hammocks can be found with more or less equal regularity in cinder-block homes, middle-class apartments and the big houses of the rich.
For the Laithwaites of Harrow & Hope, whose do-it-yourself, small-production setup is as different from the big English names as Champagne's grower-producers are from the big houses, selling their English wine has not been nearly as challenging as it was to sell Bordeaux.
In August 2017, a woman who kept a single sheep on a property in the northwest corner of New Jersey, in the midst of a neighborhood of big houses and big lawns, walked into the Hunterdon County health department to complain that she had found ticks on the animal.
In 2015, the growers shipped 1.1 million bottles of Champagne to the United States, almost triple the amount they shipped in 2003, as against about 18 million shipped by the big houses, roughly the same as in 2003, according to Comité Champagne, the group that promotes the region's wines.
While the other Westport residents have "big houses and tiny butts," Katie, her husband, and her three kids are renters who moved to the area to take advantage of the great public school system — it has a better capacity for helping Katie's youngest daughter, Anna-Kat (Julia Butters), who has a socially crippling anxiety disorder.
Pump is, frankly, still stuck in a high school mindset, his concept of fame an underdeveloped one at best: strippers, clubs, diamond chains, big houses, hanging out with other celebrities, Lamborghinis (of which there are two parked in the driveway, though Pump's management tries to discourage him from driving), and doing whatever the fuck he wants.
Just as some theatergoers prefer black box productions to Broadway spectacles, and some cinephiles prefer low-budget indies to Hollywood blockbusters, a growing number of operagoers are flocking to smaller spaces to hear new and unusual works up close, often sung by young singers with voices that would not be large enough to fill big houses.
They were following the readers out to the suburbs into their big houses and the department stores that they shopped at, and that's also where the advertisers were, and so they made a very big play to broaden the New York Times brand from being just a news brand and into being sort of a lifestyle brand.

No results under this filter, show 107 sentences.

Copyright © 2024 RandomSentenceGen.com All rights reserved.